‘Psyched’ teen snowboarder Gerard takes first USA gold

The 17-year-old landed an 87.16 point final effort in the slopestyle to snatch victory from Canadians Max Parrot, who took silver, and Mark McMorris, who picked up a second bronze after Sochi four years ago.

Published : Feb 11, 2018 15:31 IST , Pyeongchang

 Gerard was off the pace after the first and second runs, scoring 43.33 and 46.40, before somehow summoning up an enormous last effort.
Gerard was off the pace after the first and second runs, scoring 43.33 and 46.40, before somehow summoning up an enormous last effort.
lightbox-info

Gerard was off the pace after the first and second runs, scoring 43.33 and 46.40, before somehow summoning up an enormous last effort.

 

Teenage snowboarding sensation Red Gerard nailed his last run to win the first gold for the United States at the Pyeongchang Olympics on Sunday and declared: “I’m super-psyched!”

The 17-year-old landed an 87.16 point final effort in the slopestyle to snatch victory from Canadians Max Parrot, who took silver, and Mark McMorris, who picked up a second bronze after Sochi four years ago.

Read: Earthquake, wind and fire; extreme conditions hit Olympics

“I was really happy when I saw I came in as first,” said Gerard.

“I don’t know, silver (Parrot) had a pretty good run, I was questioning it.

“But you know, judges have their own minds and I’m super-psyched!”

Gerard was off the pace after the first and second runs, scoring 43.33 and 46.40, before somehow summoning up an enormous last effort.

“It feels incredible. I’m just really happy that I got to land a run and I’m just really excited right now,” said the Colorado native, who came fourth in the X-Games last month.

Gerard tried the sport as a toddler then took it up with a passion aged eight when his family moved closer to the snow.

He built his own snowboarding training ground with his brother at the back of his family home as his ambitions grew.

Appearing at an Olympics was top of his career targets after joining the World Cup circuit in 2015. And it lived up to all his hopes despite a poor first two runs.

“It was awesome. I just told myself that I want to land a run and I was a little bummed on my first two runs because I fell a couple of times,” he said.

“I’m just so happy that it all worked out.”

Canada’s Parrot, who won the X-Games Big Air this year in Aspen, Colorado, also had a disappointing first two runs but hoisted himself into silver medal position on the last attempt.

That left the bronze to McMorris, who admits to being lucky to be alive following a crash in Whistler, Canada, last year which left him with 17 broken bones, a collapsed lung and ruptured spleen.

Sign in to unlock all user benefits
  • Get notified on top games and events
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign up / manage to our newsletters with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early bird access to discounts & offers to our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide to our community guidelines for posting your comment